Journal of Nutritional Science and Vitaminology
Online ISSN : 1881-7742
Print ISSN : 0301-4800
ISSN-L : 0301-4800
Volume 56, Issue 4
Displaying 1-9 of 9 articles from this issue
Regular Paper
  • Jae Eun SHIM, Hee Young PAIK, Chan Soo SHIN, Kyong Soo PARK, Hong Kyu ...
    2010 Volume 56 Issue 4 Pages 217-221
    Published: 2010
    Released on J-STAGE: September 30, 2010
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    This study was performed to investigate the relationship between serum L-ascorbic acid, vitamin C intake, and diabetes in a nested case-control study. A cross-sectional survey of diet and health was conducted in 2,048 adults with an age of 30 y or older in Yonchon County, Korea. An oral glucose tolerance test was administered to all participants. One hundred cases of newly diagnosed diabetes were identified. Two healthy controls for each case matched with age, gender, drinking status, and smoking status were selected among the survey participants. L-Ascorbic acid levels were analyzed in fasting serum samples and one 24-h dietary recall was performed. Dietary vitamin C intake of persons with diabetes was 50.1±47.6 mg/d and that of controls was 55.1±41.1 mg/d. People with diabetes (22.3±16.8 μmol/L) have lower serum ascorbic acid levels than their controls (26.3±17.0 μmol/L) and the difference was significant by paired t-test (p<0.01). The association between diabetes and serum ascorbic acid level was still significant in non-smokers (24.2±17.8 μmol/L for the diabetes group and 29.5±16.7 μmol/L for the control group, p<0.01) but not in smokers (19.4±15.7 μmol/L for the diabetes group and 21.2±16.0 μmol/L for the control group). Our results suggest that diabetes and smoking interactively affect serum ascorbic acid levels. Since this population had poor nutritional status of vitamin C, further investigation of association between serum ascorbic acid level and diabetes and smoking by the level of vitamin C consumption is warranted.
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  • Bohuslav MELICHAR, Lenka KRCMOVÁ, Hana KALÁBOVÁ, ...
    2010 Volume 56 Issue 4 Pages 222-226
    Published: 2010
    Released on J-STAGE: September 30, 2010
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Cetuximab is a chimeric antibody registered for the therapy of advanced colorectal carcinoma. Cancer and anticancer therapy are associated with oxidative stress, and disorders of antioxidant balance may be involved in the toxicity associated with anticancer treatment. The aim of the present study was to investigate the changes of serum retinol, alpha-tocopherol and C-reactive protein during the first month of treatment with cetuximab and chemotherapy. Twenty-five consecutive patients with metastatic colorectal carcinoma treated with a combination of chemotherapy and cetuximab were included in the present study. Serum retinol and alpha-tocopherol were determined by high-performance liquid chromatography and serum C-reactive protein was determined using commercial kits. Significant correlation was observed between baseline concentrations of retinol and C-reactive protein (rs=−0.54, p<0.01). Median survival of patients who had baseline serum retinol below 1.25 μmol/L was 10 mo compared to 18 mo for patients who had serum retinol equal or above 1.25 μmol/L (p<0.05); median survival of patients who had serum C-reactive protein below 24 mg/L was significantly longer compared to patients with C-reactive protein levels equal or above 24 mg/L (18 vs. 7 mo, p<0.05), but no difference in survival was observed based on alpha-tocopherol levels. Twenty-two patients had evaluation of retinol, alpha-tocopherol and C-reactive protein at least once during the follow up. Serum concentration of alpha-tocopherol decreased significantly during the therapy, but retinol and C-reactive protein concentrations remained unchanged. In conclusion, a significant correlation was observed between serum retinol and C-reactive protein. Serum alpha-tocopherol decreased significantly during the first month of combination therapy with cetuximab. Low retinol and high C-reactive protein concentrations were predictive of poor prognosis in this patient population.
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  • Taro YAMAUCHI, Minato NAKAZAWA, Hiroshi OHMAE, Kiseko KAMEI, Kanae SAT ...
    2010 Volume 56 Issue 4 Pages 227-234
    Published: 2010
    Released on J-STAGE: September 30, 2010
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    This paper describes the health and nutritional status and quality of life (QOL) of suburban villagers in the Solomon Islands 3 y after the 1998-2003 ethnic conflict. Cross-sectional data were obtained from a small community located 50 km east of the capital city (n=206, 87 adults and 119 children). A health survey involving urine analysis, anthropometry, and blood pressure measurements was conducted to assess health and nutritional status and child growth. Simultaneously, 57 non-randomly selected adults participated in the QOL questionnaire survey. Results of anthropometry show that participants had good health and nutritional status (mean BMIs: 22.8 and 21.7 for men and women, respectively) and 73% of boys and 83% of girls were judged `normal body size' based on their BMI values. Urinalysis revealed that 88% of the participants were healthy and indicated that they consumed considerable amounts of purchased food such as rice and tinned meat. These findings suggest that the population's lifestyle had essentially recovered from the ethnic conflict. However, possible consequences of the ethnic conflict on the QOL scores were observed in the environmental domain. This study found a positive association between body fat and QOL. This could be interpreted in terms of the traditionally positive view of large bodies in the South Pacific and as resulting from unstable social conditions prevailing after the ethnic conflict.
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  • Takafumi NORII
    2010 Volume 56 Issue 4 Pages 235-241
    Published: 2010
    Released on J-STAGE: September 30, 2010
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    This study examined why decreased protein intake retards zinc deficiency in zinc-deficient rats. Rats were freely provided zinc-deficient diets with either 10 or 20% protein. Experimental groups consisted of five rats that were fed experimental diets for 0, 3, 4, 12 and 25 d in Experiment 1. The body protein content in rats fed the 10% protein diet was similar to those fed the 20% protein diet for the duration of the experiment. The body zinc content in both dietary groups slowly decreased in a similar manner. Eventually, the body zinc/protein ratio in the 10% protein diet group decreased more slowly than that in the 20% protein diet group. Ingestion of the 10% protein diet also reduced the zinc/protein ratio in bone more slowly compared with that of the 20% protein diet, under zinc-deficient conditions, at 12 d in Experiment 2. However, there was no difference in the zinc/protein ratio of carcass total soft tissue between the two zinc-deficient groups. Decreased protein intake eventually slowed the reduction in both the body and bone zinc/protein ratios in zinc-deficient rats, resulting in retardation of zinc deficiency.
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  • Atsumi HAYASHI, Koichi KIMOTO
    2010 Volume 56 Issue 4 Pages 242-246
    Published: 2010
    Released on J-STAGE: September 30, 2010
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Nicotianamine (NA), which is obtained from vegetables, lowers blood pressure through the renin-angiotensin system, and we clarified that NA preferentially inhibits the activity of angiotensin I-converting enzyme (ACE)—a zinc-containing enzyme. In this study, we elucidated the mechanism of antihypertensive action of NA through the Magnus method by using rat aortic blood vessels. Angiotensin I-induced contractions were inhibited by NA in a concentration-dependant manner. Because NA did not inhibit angiotensin II-induced contractions, it was believed that NA inhibited ACE activity in vascular smooth muscles. NA did not affect KCl-induced contractions, but it affected norepinephrine-induced contractions to a small extent. NA exerted similar effects on endothelium-denuded and endothelium-intact blood vessels. Therefore, the antihypertensive action of NA did not play a role in the opening of voltage-dependent calcium channels, but this effect influenced vasoconstriction by the activation of α-adrenergic receptors. These results suggest that after absorption from the intestinal tract, NA may exert antihypertensive effects via 2 mechanisms: direct inhibition of ACE in vascular smooth muscle and activation of α-adrenergic receptors.
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  • Masashi KAWASAKI, Yutaka MIURA, Ryuhei FUNABIKI, Kazumi YAGASAKI
    2010 Volume 56 Issue 4 Pages 247-254
    Published: 2010
    Released on J-STAGE: September 30, 2010
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    The effects of simultaneous dietary fish oil ingestion and sulfur amino acid (L-methionine and L-cystine) supplementation on serum lipid concentrations and various parameters related to the lipid metabolism were studied in Donryu rats subcutaneously implanted with an ascites hepatoma cell line, AH109A. A diet containing 10% fish oil was found to reduce serum triglyceride, total cholesterol, (very-low-density lipoprotein plus low-density lipoprotein)-cholesterol, phospholipid and nonesterified fatty acid (NEFA) concentrations in these animals, and dietary supplementation of 1.2% L-methionine and L-cystine also suppressed these serum lipid concentrations. Hepatic fatty acid synthesis and the availability of serum NEFA were decreased, and epididymal adipose tissue lipoprotein lipase (LPL) activity was elevated by dietary fish oil, while LPL activity in various tissues and hepatic fatty acid oxidation were increased by dietary sulfur amino acids, resulting in a reduction in the serum triglyceride concentration by dietary fish oil and sulfur amino acids, respectively. Dietary fish oil suppressed the hepatoma-induced increase in cholesterogenesis in the host liver, and dietary methionine and cystine enhanced bile acid excretion into feces, which were the causes of the hypocholesterolemic effect. In these serum lipid concentrations, there were significant effects of fish oil ingestion and sulfur amino acid supplementation, but no significant interaction between these two factors was seen. These results indicate that dietary fish oil and sulfur amino acid, L-methionine and L-cystine, have hypolipidemic effects in cancer-related hyperlipidemia, and that the effects of these two factors on the decrease in these serum lipid concentrations are additive; these two factors may affect the lipid metabolism via different pathways and mechanisms.
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  • Yushi KATO, Shigeharu NUMAO, Ryoko MIYAUCHI, Masashige SUZUKI
    2010 Volume 56 Issue 4 Pages 255-259
    Published: 2010
    Released on J-STAGE: September 30, 2010
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    The study investigated exercise patterns resulting in the more efficient promotion of amino acid utilization. High-protein snacks (HPS; 15 g protein, 18 g sugar) were ingested by 8 young adult subjects 3 h after the basal meal ingestion. Sixty minutes after the HPS ingestion, the subjects performed arm flex/extend exercises for 15 min. The difference between 2 exercise patterns was compared. Pattern 1: High-number long-interval (HL) arm flex/extend (3+3 s) exercise; the HL group performed 9 sets of 15 exercises with a 10 s interval between sets. Pattern 2: Low-number short-interval (LS) arm flex/extend (3+3 s) exercise; the LS group performed 27 sets of 5 exercises with a 3-4 s interval between sets (135 exercises during 15 min, respectively). The plasma branched-chain amino acid (BCAA) concentrations were measured before the HPS ingestion, before the exercise, and 60 and 90 min after the HPS ingestion. The plasma BCAA concentrations increased significantly after the HPS ingestion. In the HL group, BCAA concentration increased consistently during the period and 60 to 90 min after the HPS ingestion. During the same period in the LS group the BCAA concentration stopped increasing. After HPS ingestion, a significantly greater suppressive effect on plasma BCAA concentration was seen in the LS group compared to the HL group. Results confirmed that the intermittent blood volume fluctuation in muscle tissue during the exercise pattern performed by the LS group had an effect on the utilization of nutritional components (BCAA, glucose) from the blood, and showed the possibility that the group where the blood volume in the muscle tissue increased/lowered with higher frequency was a more effective exercise pattern for nutrient utilization.
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  • Reiko FUJIWARA, Naho SASAJIMA, Naoki TAKEMURA, Keisuke OZAWA, Yuki NAG ...
    2010 Volume 56 Issue 4 Pages 260-265
    Published: 2010
    Released on J-STAGE: September 30, 2010
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Strategies to manipulate gut microbiota in infancy have been considered to prevent the development of allergic diseases later in life. We previously demonstrated that maternal dietary supplementation with fructo-oligosaccharide (FOS) during pregnancy and lactation modulated the composition of gut microbiota and diminished the severity of spontaneously developing atopic dermatitis-like skin lesions in the offspring of NC/Nga mice. The present study tested whether dietary FOS affects contact hypersensitivity (CHS), another model for allergic skin disease, in NC/Nga mice. In experiment 1, 5-wk-old female NC/Nga mice were fed diets either with or without FOS supplementation for 3 wk and then received 2,4-dinitrofluorobenzene (DNFB) on the ear auricle 5 times at 7-d intervals. FOS supplementation reduced CHS response as demonstrated by ear swelling. Quantitative RT-PCR analysis showed that mRNA levels for interleukin (IL)-10, IL-12p40, and IL-17 in the lesional ear skin were significantly lower in mice fed FOS. In experiment 2, female NC/Nga mice were fed diets either with or without FOS during pregnancy and lactation. After weaning, offspring were fed the diets supplemented with or without FOS. Three weeks after weaning, offspring received DNFB on the ear auricle 4 times at 7-d intervals. Although FOS supplementation after weaning reduced ear swelling, maternal FOS consumption was ineffective in offspring. The present data suggest that dietary FOS reduces CHS while maternal FOS consumption is ineffective in offspring of DNFB-treated NC/Nga mice.
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Note
  • Shino SUGIYAMA, Takashi FUSHIMI, Mikiya KISHI, Shin IRIE, Shigeki TSUJ ...
    2010 Volume 56 Issue 4 Pages 266-269
    Published: 2010
    Released on J-STAGE: September 30, 2010
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    The bioavailability of acetate in various vinegar supplements, e.g. as capsules and drinks, remains unclear. Thus, we conducted a cross-over clinical study in 30 healthy subjects. After an overnight fast, subjects received each test sample in a randomised sequence: 9 vinegar capsules (containing 750 mg acetic acid in total) with 150 mL of water, 100 mL of vinegar drink (containing 750 mg acetic acid), and 150 mL of water as reference. Blood samples were collected before (defined as 0 min), at 15, 30, 45, 60, 90, 120 and 180 min after each test sample intake. In the vinegar drink group, serum acetate concentration increased immediately after intake, peaked at 15 min and returned to baseline at 90 min. That in the vinegar capsule group rose slowly, peaked at 30 min and returned to baseline at 120 min. The peak values in both groups exceeded 200 μmol/L, the physiologically active concentration confirmed by in vitro experiment. In the reference group, levels remained constant throughout the 180-min period. The amount of absorbed acetate from the vinegar capsule group and the drink group was evaluated by the difference value of the area under the serum acetate concentration-time curve (AUC) between in each vinegar group and in the reference group (expressed as AUCcapsule-ref and AUCdrink-ref , respectively). AUCcapsule-ref was about 80% of AUCdrink-ref , but there was no significant difference between them.
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